[No responsible editors or project lead mentioned] Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society [no publication date; probably 2017]
"The John Quincy Adams Diary Digital Project will make JQA’s diary truly accessible for the first time by presenting a verified and searchable transcription
of each entry alongside the manuscript page images on the MHS website. Enhanced access to this free resource will include keyword and personal name
search ability, along with topical search features based on themes in middle and high school American History curricula." [from resource]

Ed. by Nancy Heywood et al., Boston (MA), Massachusetts Historical Society, 2003.
"The Adams Family Papers: An
Electronic Archive presents selections from the most important manuscript collection
held by the Massachusetts Historical Society. Digital images of the letters
exchanged between John and Abigail Adams, John Adams's diary, and John Adams's
autobiography are presented alongside transcriptions." [from resource]

Project advised by Thomas O'Connor, Catherine O'Leary and John Keating, managed by Aja Teehan and John Keating, Maynooth, An Foras Feasa, 2008.
The digitised material presented here is taken for the college’s account books or Libros de gastos del colegio de Alcalá (Russell Library, Salamanca Archives, Legajo S30,
nos 1-3). They were placed in the archives of the Irish college, Salamanca on the closure of the Alcalá college in 1785 and were brought back to Ireland in 1951.
They are now housed in the Russell Library, Maynooth College where they form part of the Salamanca Archive, the most important Spanish-language archive on these islands.
This digitised version of the account books for the years immediately prior to the college’s closure offer a unique insight into the day-to-day running of the college with
valuable information on diet, discipline and domestic matters.
As of 09/2018 the edition, once at http://archives.forasfeasa.ie seems to be gone. The wayback-machine has a snapshop of the landing page from 23.09.2010.
What's left is an article about the project, published in Jahrbuch für Computerphilologie 10 (2010).

Ed. by Bella Millett, Glossary by Richard Dance, o.O., Early English Text Society, 1999-2003.
"This trial electronic edition of
the Preface to Ancrene Wisse is based on a non-electronic edition of the full text
currently being prepared for publication by EETS [Early English Text Society]. It
includes most of the components of a traditional EETS edition, but the electronic
edition also includes a translation (no longer provided by most EETS editions), and
reproductions and transcriptions of the relevant sections of three important early
manuscripts." [from resource]
The originally at <http://www.tei-c.org.uk/Projects/EETS/> published digital edition seems to be reachable only via wayback machine in 2012. Additionally there is another 2003-HTML-Mockup.

Directed by Francesca Tinti and Juan José Larrea, developed by David Peterson, based on transcriotions by García Andreva,
Bilbao: University of the Basque Country 2013.
"The Becerro Galicano is a monastic cartulary that was compiled around the year 1195 in the famous Spanish abbey of San Millán de la
Cogolla, in what is today Rioja province. The single volume in Caroline script, hence ‘Galicano’, contains some 750 documents ranging in
date from 759 to 1194, as well as some twenty texts introduced into its end folios during the thirteenth century.
As well as via the indices and associated search tools, the user can access both high resolution images of the cartulary’s folios and the
transcription of their contents. In this latter case, the transcription can be viewed in codicological order, thus following the cartulary’s own
sequence and logic, or chronologically. Additionally, if the user opts for chronological order, the material can be ordered according to either the
dates as they appear in the codex or using the critical dates which we have suggested for the two hundred or so texts that lack reliable dates." [from resource]

Research group led by Anne Baillot, Berlin, Humboldt-Universität, 2012ff.
"This edition presents texts that were until this day
either completely unpublished or published in an abridged form. Conceived
and developed in cooperation with the archives that preserve them, this
edition provides a digital access to the original manuscripts. The
editorial and scholarly work on the manuscripts is realized by the junior
research group "Berlin intellectuals 1800-1830".The first corpora
edited since March 2012 are: 20 letters from Adolf von Buch to Louis de
Beausobre from the period 1759-1764 (in French), 23 letters from Ludwig
Tieck to Friedrich von Raumer from the period 1815-1830 (in German), 17
letters from Adelbert von Chamisso to Louis de La Foye (1804-1812, mostly
German), 4 letters from August Boeckh to Varnhagen von Ense and the
Prussian Ministry of Culture (1812-1839, in German), Boeckh’s list of his
personal library (in German), Tieck's youth drama "Roxane" (1789/90, in
German), the original manuscript of E.T.A. Hoffmann's "Der Sandmann"
(1815, in German), and two texts by Helmina von Chézy (1844, in German)." [from resource]

Project lead by Nick Tyson et al., Hove, Regency Town House,
2009.
Offers transcriptions, images and contextual information for 37
letters (as of november 2011).
The link goes now (2018) to an extended project. For the original project landing page see an internet archive snapshot from 2010.

Edited and directed by Robyn Adams, Version 5, Centre for Editing Lives and Letters, University College London, 2011.
"The letters of Thomas Bodley relating to his diplomatic activity between 1585-97 will be released in chronological sections.
This is Version 5 of the edition. This Version comprises incoming and outgoing letters written in English between Thomas Bodley and his
correspondents during the years 1585-97.
This edition [...] pioneers a unique transcription method. The letters have been encoded in such a way as to permit readers to custom-build
their own transcripts, according to their research preferences. For instance, a general reader may wish to view the letters in their complete,
non-abbreviated form, while a scholar interested in orthographic and material features of the period will want to see these reproduced in the
transcripts. [...] Customisable transcripts enable the reader to engage with the text according to their own research needs. Users will be able to
mediate the texts to their own specification. Citation of the transcripts takes into account the alternative elements available to view or mask.
" [from resource 9/2013]

Hg. von Michael Hunter, London, A.H.R.C Centre For Editing Lives And
Letters, 2004. "From this site you can view images and transcripts of the
workdiaries, search the workdiary texts, and access reference resources on places,
people and books." [from resource]

Ed. by Nora Dimmock et al. Rochester: University of Rochster Libraries 2016.
"Ten diaries spanning 1893-1914 present an illustrated view of the life of a single working woman set free by the bicycle and enlivened by friendships,
the Kodak, the theatre, and a connection with the natural world.
The May Bragdon Diaries Project presents TEI encoded full text transcriptions and facsimiles of these ten diaries on a searchable website.
The site allows simultaneous viewing of a transcription alongside the manuscript and the original (as created) view of each page as well as images of any inclusions from that page." [from resource]

Project lead by Maurizio Ghelardi, Pisa: Scuola Normale Superiore, 2015.
"The whole corpus of letters to Jacob Burckhardt consists of about 1100
documents: by now [16.09.2015] are visible 600 missives. Yet, on the 28th September the
map for geographical research and an additional assortment of letters will
be released, while on the 12th October the advanced semantic research and
further missives will be uploaded. The remaining letters will be published
once every two weeks.
The Digital Library offers two versions for each letter: the default
visualisation is the «Semantic edition». A special section is dedicated to
«Metadata», where an extensive number of data establishes the letters
context. The so-called «Collections» suggest a thematic navigation through
the Digital Library. Still, an easy access to the letters is also handy
through the metadata: Year, Sender, Compilation and Receving Place." [from mailing list announcement, 16.09.2015]

Coordinated by Rita Marquilhas, Lisbon: Centro de Linguística da Universidade de Lisboa, 2012.
The website presents two letter editing projects: (1) Project CARDS - Cartas Desconhecidas, Unknown Letters, aims on publishing c. 2000 private letters from 1500-1900.
"The whole set is constituted by a majority of letters from court proceedings, and a minority (10%) of letters from aristocratic family archives." (2) Project FLY -
Forgotten Letters, Years 1900-1974, concerns another sample of 2000 private letters "written in the contexts of war, migration, imprisonment and exile".
The edition(s) provide facsimiles, transcriptions, TEI-XML-files (following the DALF-DTD), and PDF export as well as documentation, registers and indexes designed to cover questions of syntax, phonology, pragmatics, cultural and socio-political history, and sociology.
It offers very clear browsing structures and good search facilities.

Ed. by Brent E. Kinser, Durham (NC): Duke University Press, 2007
"Here you will find a perspective on the 19th century like no other, through the words of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle.
Browse over 10,000 of their collected letters by date, by recipient, by subject, and by volume. We invite you to explore a
correspondence that features some of the most influential artistic, philosophic, and literary personalities of the day." [from resource]

Ed. by Edmund Berkeley Jr., Charlottesville (VA), University of
Virginia Library, 2000-2007.
"This site includes transcriptions of the
diary, correspondence, and papers of the richest and most important man of his day
in Virginia [...]". Transcriptions are presented on two levels: in "original
spelling" and "modern spelling". [from resource] The texts are linked to
commentaries and registers (persons, places, and things).

A London Provisioner's Chronicle, 1550–1563, by Henry Machyn: Manuscript, Transcription, and Modernization.
Created by Richard W. Bailey, Marilyn Miller, and Colette Moore. Hosted by MPublishing, a division of the University of Michigan Library. 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/2027/spo.5076866.0001.001
"The Chronicle was one of the treasures of the library of the antiquarian Robert Cotton, and it was stored in the same bookcase with the Beowulf manuscript.
[...]
Our edition gives a complete inventory of material required by scholars and readers: images of the manuscript, a faithful transcript of those images, and a
rendering in modern English of this fascinating document." [from resource]

Directed by Patrick A. Lewis. Frankfort (KY): Kentucky Historical Society, 2016
"The Civil War Governors of Kentucky Digital Documentary Edition is a freely-accessible online collection
of historical documents associated with the chief executives of the state, 1860-1865. Civil War Governors
is about far more than the five governors, though. The project records the diverse and largely unknown lives
of tens of thousands of Kentuckians, and opens new windows onto the local and personal Civil War stories
that have been overlooked." [from resource]

Directed by John Lutz, Victoria (BC), Humanities Computing and
Media Centre / University of Victoria, [presumably] 2008.
"This digital archive contains the original correspondence between the
British Colonial Office and the colonies of Vancouver Island and British Columbia.
This project aims to digitize and publish online a complete archive of the
correspondence covering the period from 1846 [... to] 1871. All the material on this
site originates in the work of Dr. James Hendrickson and his team of collaborators
at the University of Victoria, which resulted in the publication of 28 print volumes
of correspondence several years ago." [from resource]

Edited by Catherine Dobias-Lalou. Bologna: CRR-MM, Alma Mater Studiorum Università di Bologna, 2017. ISBN 9788898010684, http://doi.org/10.6092/UNIBO/IGCYRGVCYR
"The Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica (IGCyr) and the Greek Verse Inscriptions of Cyrenaica (GVCyr) are two corpora, the first collecting all the inscriptions of Greek (VII-I centuries B.C.) Cyrenaica, the second gathering the Greek metrical texts of all periods (VI B.C.-VI A.D.). These new critical editions of inscriptions from Cyrenaica are part of the international project Inscriptions of Libya (InsLib). For the first time all the inscriptions known to us in March 2017, coming from this area of the ancient Mediterranean world, are assembled in a single online and open access publication." [from resource]

Jane Ohlmeyer, Thomas Bartlett, Dr Micheál Ó Siochrú and John Morrill (principal investigators), Aidan Clarke (transcriptions).Dublin: Trinity College, 2007-2010.
"Fully searchable digital edition of the 1641 Depositions at Trinity College Dublin Library,
comprising transcripts and images of all 8,000 depositions, examinations and associated
materials in which Protestant men and women of all classes told of their experiences following
the outbreak of the rebellion by the Catholic Irish in October, 1641" [from resource]

Edited by Zarko Vojosevic, Belgrade: Serbian Academy’s Institute for Balkan Studies 2015.
"DSD is an electronic database of documentary heritage of medieval Serbian rulers, regional lords, ecclesiastic dignitaries, and various other authorities and individuals. It contains images, diplomatic analyses, and editions of their preserved charters and letters issued from the late 12th to the early 16th century. This virtual archive brings together material that is physically dispersed in archives, libraries and private collections throughout Europe, thus creating what is currently the only complete “national” archive of medieval documents." [from resource]

Ed. by John Palmer et al., Chichester, Phillimore / Arts and Humanities Research Council, 2000. ISBN 978-1860771637 (CD-ROM).
"The
CD-ROM includes the modern Phillimore translation of Great Domesday Book, ed. by
John Morris, high resolution images of the Latin manuscript, interactive mapping of
all searches, searchable indexes [etc]". [from resource]

Directed by David Rollason and Harold Short, London, Centre for Computing in the Humanities / King´s College London, 2003-.
[Von dm-l]
"The Durham Liber Vitae (DLV) Project is funded by the AHRC and based in the history
department at the University of Durham and the Centre for Computing in the
Humanities at King's College London. The project aims to create a complete, modern,
annotated edition of this difficult manuscript, combining XML (TEI) and database
technologies. The edition will be a paper publication of the transcript, generated
indices, linguistic and prosopographical commentary, with digital facsmile and other
resources on DVD-ROM. Depending on time issues, there may also be an online
component to the publication."
The server at http://dlv.org.uk/ is still there, but its appearance can now only be found in the Internet Archive. A very short note on the project is provided by a King's College page. The project has eventually lead to a printed edition with CD-ROM: Durham Liber Vitae: The Complete Edition, by David and Lynda Rollason, London: British Library 2007. [2018]

Ed. by Róisín O'Brien, Cork: Cork Open Research Archive 2013.
"'Digitising the Diaries of Aloys Fleischmann: a prototype for novices' is a thesis project undertaken by Róisín O’Brien, with the collaboration of the
Fleischmann family and under the guidance of practitioners, as part of a Masters in Digital Arts and Humanities at University College Cork (UCC), Ireland.
The project involved the digitisation of the 1926 and 1927 diaries of the late German-born Irish composer, Aloys Fleischmann (1910 – 1992). In addition
to digital preservation, the aim of the Fleischmann Diaries project was to create a freely available digitisation prototype for scholars and non-practitioners,
providing them with a reproducible model. The project focused on digital photography and the online publication of the digitised archive. Future
expansion will consist of metadata development, which will transform the site into an enhanced scholarly resource. A supporting dissertation,
documenting the technical process and establishing a theoretical basis, is published on the dissertation page of the site." [from resource]

Diane Favro (principal investigator), Los Angeles: UCLA, ca. 2011.
"This website addresses the material evidence concerning the statues displayed during the fourth and fifth centuries CE in the open
areas of the Roman Forum as documented by inscriptions. The navigable reconstruction of the Forum represents statues within their urban
context so as to indicate the space in which civic rituals occurred. The visualization relies upon archeological evidence that precisely
attests to the original display spots of many statues; carefully considered hypotheses point toward plausible locations of the other artworks."
[from resource]

Ed. by David W. Packard, Los Altos (CA), Packard Humanities Institute, 1988 [CD-ROM-Version] - 2006 [online-version].
"A digital
version of the Franklin Papers, created and maintained by the Packard Humanities
Institute (PHI) and previously available to scholars and researchers on a CD-ROM, is
now available to the public [...]. This digital edition includes texts of the
published papers and unverified, rough transcriptions of the as-yet-unpublished
material. The rough transcriptions will be replaced with verified texts as future
volumes of the Franklin Papers are published. The texts are fully searchable and
they are indexed by volume, name of correspondent, and date. The digital edition
does not include [the] editorial headnotes and footnotes [from the printed volumes].
It does, however, contain biographical sketches of all Franklin's correspondents,
written exclusively for this database, and it provides translations of some of the
French documents." [from resource]

Ed. by Peter Ainsworth, Godfried Croenen et al., Sheffield /
Liverpool, Humanities Research Institute et al., 2007-2010.
"Jean
Froissart’s Chroniques cover the period from around 1326 to around 1400 and are the
single most important medieval prose narrative about the first part of the Hundred
Years’ War. More than 150 manuscript volumes containing the Chronicles have survived
[...]. The Online Froissart offers access to the manuscript tradition of the
first three Books of Froissart’s Chronicles. It delivers complete or partial
transcriptions of all 112 surviving manuscripts containing these Books, a new
translation into modern English providing readers with an accessible way of
exploring chapters selected from the first three Books, several complete
high-resolution reproductions of illuminated manuscript copies, and a range of
secondary materials (codicological descriptions, name index, historical
commentaries, textual commentaries, scholarly essays, glossary and commentaries on
the illustrations). The Online Froissart also provides a number of advanced
tools to unlock the riches of the resource. These include a collation tool allowing
word-by-word comparisons, a search engine for simple and complex queries, a
transcription viewing mode allowing users to go straight to entries in the online
Dictionnaire du Moyen Français, and a dedicated manuscript viewer for manipulating
the electronic facsimiles.

Ed. by Malcolm. G. A. Vale et al., London, Centre for Computing in the Humanities / King´s College London, 2010.
"The Gascon Rolls project
has been established with the aim of making the rolls accessible to researchers. The
aims of the project are ambitious, and are to provide a full calendar (summary
translation) edition of all the unpublished rolls – C 61/32–144 (1317-1468). The
edition will initially be provided as an online resource only. It will be available
alongside high quality digital images of the original rolls provided by The National
Archives (TNA). There will also be extensive indexes which will be fully searchable
and a full historical introduction which will make the edition an invaluable
resource for scholars" [from resource]

Ed. by Victoria Myers, David O'Shaughnessy and Mark Philp, Oxford, Oxford Digital Library, 2010.
"Godwin’s diary consists of 32 octavo
notebooks [...] [with entries from] 6 April 1788 [...] [to] 26 March 1836. [...] The
diary is a resource of immense importance to researchers of history, politics,
literature, and women’s studies. It maps the radical intellectual and political life
of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, as well as providing
extensive evidence on publishing relations, conversational coteries, artistic
circles and theatrical production over the same period. One can also trace the
developing relationships of one of the most important families in British literature
[...] [and m]any of the most important figures in British cultural history feature
in its pages. The diary has been transcribed and encoded so that it is fully
searchable. High resolution scanned images of the diary are also provided."
"The project has sought to code the diary so as to retain the richness and diversity
of the information. Each element in a day’s entry has been coded so as to
distinguish what Godwin read, what he wrote, whom he saw, where he saw them, in what
activities or meals they shared, and where he went." [from resource]

Project supervised by Tim Weyrich and Melissa Terras, London: London Metropolitan Archives 2012
"The Great Parchment Book of The Honourable The Irish Society is a major survey, compiled in 1639 [...], of all those estates in
Derry managed by the City of London through the Irish Society and the City of London livery companies. [...] Damaged as the result of a fire at Guildhall in 1786, it has been unavailable to researchers for over 200 years." [from resource]

Project lead by Alison Wiggins. Glasgow: University of Glasgow, Version 1.0, ISBN 978-0-9571022-3-1, 2013
"Bess of Hardwick (c.1521/2 or 1527-1608) is one of Elizabethan England's most famous figures. [the edition contains] 234 letters to and
from Bess available as transcripts (diplomatic, normalised, print-friendly or xml), colour images of 185 letters and
the option to create your own transcripts, search and browse facilities to filter the letters by material or visual
features or by events in Bess's life, commentaries that provide overviews of Bess's life in 12
letters and editing her letters, and guides to the material features and the language of early
modern letters." [from resource]

Ed. by Jim Labosier, Bethesda (MD), U.S. National Library of
Medicine, 2010.
The Henkel Family Correspondence collection (MS C 291;
1.5 linear feet) consists of 828 letters and is largely the product of Caspar C.
Henkel's (1835-1908) life. This digital edition is divided into 5-year blocks for
ease of navigation and contextual narrative. Each electronic text was created
by transcription of the original texts. No spelling, grammatical, or word usage
corrections were made to the original text. Editorial interventions are enclosed
with square brackets [ ]. Page images are of the original text." [from resource]

By Jean-Paul Rehr. Lyon: CIHAM/CNRS. 2018.
"De Heresi is home to the digital edition of MS 609 of the Bibliothèque municipale de Toulouse, the oldest extant original document from the first generation of inquisition.
De Heresi contains the digital edition of selections from other archives to help researchers understand more fully the social context of the people subject to the earliest heresy inquisitions.
The architecture of this site permits researchers to trace people, events, and ideas across different documents. " [from resource]

Hg. von Robyn Adams, London, A.H.R.C. Centre for Editing Lives and
Letters, 2006. [the edition] "provides transcripts of 302 of Herle's
letters written in English and a series of indexes by which they can be browsed - by
archival location, date, author, recipient, first line or place from - as well as
lists of multiple copies and letters with enclosures. A word-search facility allows
the letter transcripts to be searched for particular words or phrases according to a
range of criteria. Sample images illustrate features of the material nature of these
letters. There are also editorial materials that include an introduction,
biographical register, bibliography and details of the project's editorial policy."
[from resource]

Ed. by Paulina Kewes, Ian Archer et al., Oxford, Centre for Early
Modern Studies, 2008.
"The Holinshed Project hopes [...] to co-ordinate a
new fifteen volume edition of the Chronicles to be published by Oxford University
Press. In the meantime we have developed a parallel text edition of the two versions
of the Chronicles published in 1577 and 1587. This enables all interested in the
Chronicles to make comparisons between the two texts, and provide an essential tool
for the later full edition." [from resource] The edition makes use of the TEI
Comparator Tool

Ed. by J.W.J. Burgers. The Hague: Huygens Instituut, [no year given; before 2014].
"This is an electronic edition of the registers that were kept by the clerks of the Counts of Holland, Zeeland and West-Friesland
during the period 1299-1345. These records register over 3,500 documents and other texts relating to the Counts’ administration,
all of which are published here." [from resource]

By Sid Huttner (Principal Investigator), Colleen Kelley, Anne Covell, Nana Holtsnider and Juli McLoone (Project Managers). Iowa City (IA): The University of Iowa Libraries, 2008-2011.
"Leigh Hunt (1784-1859) was a British Romantic writer and a contemporary of Byron, Shelley, and Keats; his activities and influence also
extended well into the Victorian period. In addition to being one of the most outspoken and influential journalists in the age of the French
Revolution, Hunt was a prolific prose writer and an innovative poet. Hunt’s extensive correspondence reveals an intimate knowledge of
literary, artistic, political, and religious ideas circulating in the first half of nineteenth-century Britain. This digital collection aims to make
both facsimile images and word-searchable transcripts of approximately 1,600 letters written by Hunt and his acquaintances available to
scholars and the interested public." [from resource]

By Michael Hicks (Principal Investigator) et al., Winchester: University of Winchester, 2015.
"Mapping the Medieval Countryside is a digital edition of the medieval English inquisitions post mortem (IPMs), currently covering the period 1418-1447.
IPMs recorded the lands held at their deaths by tenants of the crown, and are the single most important source for the study of landed society in medieval
England. Describing the lands held by thousands of families, from nobles to peasants, they are a key source for the history of almost every parish in England
and many in Wales." [from resource]

Ed. by Miklós Latzkovits et al. Szeged: University of Szeged, 2015.
"IAA contains information about 16-18th century alba amicorum (German Stammbücher, in English also known as 'friendship albums', 'autograph albums',
'books of friends') entries of Hungarian relevance." [from resource] Entries in many different languages; Database edition with transcriptions and facsimiles; Indices for persons and places; browse and search access.

Directed by Askold Ivantchik and Irene Polinskaya, London: King's College London, 2011.
"The aims of the project include a new study of all Ancient Greek and Latin inscriptions originating from the Northern
Coast of the Black Sea; and publication of Russian and English critical editions of the inscriptions in print and digital formats. [...]
The new conception of the IOSPE corpus consists in capturing in its entirety the ancient epigraphic production of the northern Pontic region –
that is, not only inscriptions made on stone (lapidary inscriptions), but also on other media and fabrics, such as ceramics, metal, and bone. [...]
The first stage of the project involves publication of Lapidary Inscriptions. There will be about 5,000 lapidary texts published in IOSPE,
about three times as many as in the original corpus."

Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania, by J. M. Reynolds and J. B. Ward-Perkins,
enhanced electronic reissue by Gabriel Bodard and Charlotte Roueché (2009). ISBN 978-1-897747-23-0.
"The first publication of Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania, which appeared in 1952, has long been out of print.
Produced in post-war conditions, it only included illustrations of a few inscriptions, although very many of them had been photographed; and it
only offered limited geographic information.
The purposes of this enhanced reissue are, therefore, to make the original material available again, and to provide the full photographic record,
together with geographical data linking the inscriptions to maps and gazetteers, and so to other resources.
Electronic publication makes this possible, and also allows us to offer greater functionality, such as free text searches.
We have included the material from the supplement which contained further texts, numbered in the same sequence (973-996):
'Inscriptions of Roman Tripolitania: a supplement', published in PBSR 23 (1955), 124-147, and we have incorporated corrections and
emendations made in that article; but we have not attempted to alter or emend any item otherwise.
The indices of this edition are generated from the texts themselves. This means that in some cases they will diverge from those in the
original edition, usually being fuller: but the material in three texts not included in that edition (261, 262 and 855) and the Neo-Punic
personal names do not appear in these indices." [from resource]

Ed. by Gary Dunham and Katherine Walter, Lincoln (NE), University of
Nebraska, 2002-2007.
"An online, searchable, conflated edition based on
editor Gary E. Moulton's work published by the University of Nebraska Press and the
UNL Center for Great Plains Studies. The site includes related multimedia and
scholarly works." [from resource]

Edited by Susan Schreibman, Dublin: Trinity College, 2013.
"The Letters of 1916 project is the first public humanities project in Ireland. Its goal is to create a crowd-sourced digital collection of letters written
around the time of the Easter Rising (1 November 1915 – 31 October 1916).

Project lead by Adrian S. Wisnicki, Los Angeles (CA), UCLA Library, 2011.
"Together with the text of the diary, the project [...]
make[s] available an exciting and rich array of complementary materials: - a
Livingstone spectral image archive that digitally preserves all the pages of
Livingstone’s 1870 and 1871 Field Diaries as high-resolution spectral images with
full metadata, and so that allows direct access to all the primary Livingstone data
on which this critical edition is based; and - a webpage that allows comparison
between the original 1871 Field Diary, the highly revised 1872 Journal created by
Livingstone, and the further revised 1874 book posthumously produced by
Livingstone’s friend, Horace Waller; - critical, textual, and historical essays
and notes; - a detailed project history and archive that chronicles the
fascinating journey of Livingstone’s words from the "rediscovery" of the faded diary
in 2009 to its publication today as the first significant nineteenth-century British
literary manuscript to be enhanced with spectral imaging and processing. The project
archive contains over 60 downloadable documents and files produced in the course of
the project that collectively provide an intimate and comprehensive look into the
production of this critical edition" [from resource]

co-directed by Christopher Lawrence and Adrian S. Wisnicki. London: University College 2006-2012.
"Livingstone Online is an ongoing project that provides access to the manuscripts of the missionary, doctor and African explorer
David Livingstone (1813-1873). We currently offer images and detailed transcriptions of many of Livingstone's letters, and we aim to
make all of his manuscripts - including his diaries and journals - freely available online. We also run a transatlantic collaboration to
apply spectral imaging and processing to restore a series of faded, illegible texts produced by Livingstone during his last travels (1866-1873)." [from resource]

Ed. by Chris L. Nighman, Waterloo (Ontario), Wilfrid Laurier University, 2001-2015.
"Thomas of Ireland's Manipulus florum ("Handful of flowers") belongs to the genre of medieval texts known as florilegia, collections of authoritative quotations [...].
Building upon the seminal scholarship of Mary Rouse and Richard Rouse, who published an extensive study of the Manipulus florum in 1979 that includes editions of
Thomas' Preface and his list of authors and works (Preachers, pp.251-310), The Electronic Manipulus florum Project provides an Open Access critical edition of this
florilegium, as well as a number of related Open Access research materials and various auxiliary resources." [from resource]

Directed by Colin Greenstreet and Jill Wilcox, [no hosting institution declared] 2014ff.
"MarineLives is an innovative academic/public history not-for-profit organisation for the collaborative
transcription, linkage and enrichment of primary manuscripts, originating High Court of Admiralty, London,
1650-1669. The end product will be a freely available online academic edition under a CC by 3.0 licence.
Since the project’s inception in September 2012, project volunteers have transcribed, edited and annotated
over 1.5 million words. The team is seeking to create a fully searchable semantic web based corpus of over
20 million words by 2017." [from resource]

No responsible editor named, Dunedin (NZ): University of Otago, ca. 2014
"The Marsden Online Archive provides access to high resolution images of manuscripts along with associated transcripts created by Retired
Associate Professor Gordon Parsonson. The initial release of the site contains material from 1808 to 1823 [...]. Searching this site will return
results based on the transcribed text and the metadata associated with an item. You can filter results based on a number of filters. The site allows for
Text String Searching, Boolean Searching, Fuzzy Search, Wildcards and other Search Types. Also available is an Advanced Search page that allows
you to select known options from pre-populated drop down boxes." [from resource]

Ed. by Mariken Teeuwen et al., Den Haag, Huygens Instituut,
2008.
"This website contains the edition of the oldest gloss-tradition on
Martianus Capella's De nuptiis Philologiae et Mercurii, based on the ninth-century
manuscript Leiden, UB, Vossianus Latinus Folio 48." "This edition is made with
the help of a digital tool which was newly developed over the course of the project:
eLaborate. The primary goal of eLaborate is to facilitate online collaborative
transcribing and editing of texts. When more and more projects started to use the
tool, a second goal became the online presentation of editions, with clever digital
functionalities that allow a varied, user-chosen presentation of the text, and
simple searches. [...] The photos shown on this website are digitalized
pictures from a black-and-white microfilm. [...] The 'edition' shown in this website
is best described as a 'semi-diplomatic edition': it follows the central manuscript
closely, but silently resolves abbreviations, and notes corruptions wherever the
editors have noted them, or solves passages which are hard to read in the Vossianus
manuscript with the help of other manuscripts. Punctuation and capitals are added in
most cases, following modern rules. The edition is presented in four columns:
(1) navigation, (2) facsimile, (3) transcription of De nuptiis, (4) transcription of
the annotations. [...] Text and/or annotations can be searched by using the simple
search tool in the top part of the screen. [...] The transcriptions of the
annotations frequently include remarks from the editors, ranging from plane question
marks (where they could not read or understand annotations), to clever insights in
textual problems, translations, variants from other manuscripts, parallels with
other commentary traditions, or identifications of sources used by the
glossators."[from resource]

A project by Jane Burns, Sinéad Moloney, Rachel Murphy, Gordon O’Sullivan and Patrizia Rebulla. Dublin: Trinity College, 2012.
A Family at War: Mary Martin’s Diary, 1 January – 25 May 1916 is an online exhibition of the Diary of Mary Martin, a widow and mother of twelve
children, living in the affluent Dublin suburb of Monkstown.[...]
Created by students enrolled in the Digital Scholarly Editing module on the MPhil in Digital Humanities and Culture and PhD in
Digital Arts and Humanities (DAH) taught by Susan Schreibman, Trinity College Dublin, Spring 2012, this online exhibition is a
fascinating source for anyone interested in Irish history, military history, women’s history and genealogy.
The Mary Martin Diary includes 132 diary entries that were recorded from January 1- May 25, 1916. Each of these entries has
been transcribed and compiled into searchable database. The original diary is held at the National Library of Ireland.
The diary is searchable for specific people and places, and can be read chronologically, or by a specific entry." [from resource]

[no responsible editors identified], Florence: The Medici Archive Project, 2012
Within the larger framework of The Medici Archives Project, BIA offers access to
a corpus of (ca. 25.000) transcribed and indexed letters. As this follows some sort of "database" or "digital archive"
paradigm and there is no introdcution, no overview and no browsing access, it is rather hard to understand what is really in there.
However, a lot of transcriptions and synopses, as well as indexed persons and places can be found through the search interface
Some documentation on BIA can be found on the Medici Archives page.
From the self description: "BIA allows for advanced searches into the epistolary collection of the Grand Ducal Medici Family. Users are able to find entire volumes or individual documents by search through place, person, and category tags, archival collocation, date of creation, and keywords."

Ed. by Noemí Cadena Corona et al., Mexico City, INAH, 2014.
"The Codex Mendoza is the most significant and iconic document from sixteenth-century New Spain that describes the empire of the huey tlatoani
(emperor) Moctezuma Xocoyotzin on the eve of the arrival of the Spaniards in the New World. [...]
This digital edition of the Codex Mendoza represents the first attempt in the world to create a digital resource that permits an in-depth study
of a Mexican codex. Through this work the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH; National Institute of Anthropology and History)
demonstrates the broad-based utility of this type of edition and the need to seek new forms of representation for such complex systems of knowledge.
At the same time, the effort furthers the permanent calling of the INAH to study, preserve, and spread awareness of the cultural patrimony of the Mexican people."
[from resource]

Directed by Béla Kapossy, editorial work by Sarah Meylan and Sabine Pellaux. Lausanne: Université de Lausanne, 2013.
148 letters as diplomatic and as edited text with some text critical commentary and lists of primary and secondary literature.

Peter Thonemann and Charles Crowther, Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents, Oxford: University of Oxford, Version 1.0, 2012
"Monumenta Asiae Minoris Antiqua (MAMA) XI [is] a corpus of 387 inscriptions and other ancient monuments from Phrygia and Lykaonia,
recorded by Sir William Calder (1881-1960) and Dr Michael Ballance (†27 July 2006) in the course of annual expeditions to Asia Minor
in 1954-1957. The MAMA XI project has been funded by a grant from the Arts and Humanities Research Council, and is based at the Centre
for the Study of Ancient Documents in Oxford." [from resource]

Ed. by Cliff Eisen et al., Sheffield, HRI Online, 2011.
"In Mozart’s Words provides
multilingual access to an annotated version of the voluminous correspondence of
Mozart and his family - approximately 1,400 letters [...]. The website offers i) a
univocal database of all references to people, places and musical works contained in
the letters, facilitating the systematic search of all cited occurrences, and ii)
access to background materials such as reviews, newspapers, documents, objects,
paintings, engravings, and books as a corollary to the historical-critical
annotations." [from resource] The edition provides browsing access to the letters by
chronology, people, places, works, and addressees/sender. The letters are presented
in three views: (i) english translation (with annotations), (ii) synopsis of
original and modernized german text, (iii) facsimile and diplomatic transcription
(from the server of the Mozarteum in Salzburg).

Ed. by Jonathan Herold, Toronto (ON), University of Toronto,
2004-.
"This website currently contains parallel transcriptions of the
Nero-Middleton Cartulary and corresponding texts from Liber Wigornensis, along with
images of the two cartulary manuscripts, a select bibliography, and related
supporting material drawn from a variety of early printed sources." [from
resource]

Nora White (Pricipal Investigator), Dublin: Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 2015
"Ogham stones are among Ireland's most remarkable national treasures. These perpendicular cut stones bear inscriptions in the
uniquely Irish Ogham alphabet, using a system of notches and horizontal or diagonal lines/scores to represent the sounds of an early
form of the Irish language. The stones are inscribed with the names of prominent people and sometimes tribal affiliation or geographical areas.
These inscriptions constitute the earliest recorded form of Irish and, as our earliest written records dating back at least as far as the 5th
century AD, are a significant resource for historians, as well as linguists and archaeologists. [...] The ultimate aim of the Ogham in 3D project
is to laser-scan as many as possible of the approximately four hundred surviving Ogham stones and to make these 3D models freely available on the
Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies website as part of a multi-disciplinary archive of Ogham stones." [from resource]

no editor mentioned, Washington D.C. 2004ff.
The Jefferson Papers were an early digital edition project at the Library of Congress whose history can partially be studied through
the internet archive's snapshots between 2004 and 2015
The current (as of 2018) landing page tells about the further fate of the online edition.

Ed. by Chris Given-Wilson, Leicester, Scholarly Digital Editions, 2005. ISBN 978-0904628052 (CD-ROM).
[Selbstbeschreibung:] "This
CD-ROM contains the full text and translation of the meetings of the English
parliament from Edward I to Henry VII, covering the years from 1272 to 1504. All
surviving records of the parliaments, including many texts never before published,
are given in full, with new scholarly introductions to each parliament. The
parliament rolls themselves are freshly transcribed from the original documents,
while the transcripts incorporate precise information about the text in the
documents (e.g., deleted and unreadable text) never before available. Over 100
specimen images show the rolls themselves, while a sophisticated search system
permits retrieval of words and phrases across the whole text." Der Link zeigt auf
die Seite der SDE.

Edited by Constance B. Schulz, Charlottesville (VA): University of Virginia Press, 2012. ISBN 9780813932514.
"The papers of Eliza Lucas Pinckney (1722–1793) and her daughter Harriott Pinckney Horry (1748–1830) document the lives of two observant
and articulate founding-era women who were members of one of South Carolina’s leading families. Their letters, diaries, and other documents
span nearly a century (1739–1830) and provide a window on politics, social events, and people of the late colonial and early national periods.
They richly detail the daily life of maintaining family ties and managing households and plantations. Pinckney’s correspondence illustrates the
importance of women’s social connections and transatlantic friendships. Horry’s correspondence documents the strength of personal ties that
linked the elite families of the North and the South to each other even as connections were threatened by disputes over slavery, commercial
differences, and political and constitutional conflict." [from resource]
There are various sites to be regarded for this edition:Starting page for the edition at Rotunda pressCatalog of University of >Virginia PressWebsite at University of South CarolinaDocuments Compass site on the editionReview in Scholarly Editing

The registers of the Counts of Holland in the Hainaut period, 1299-1345. Project lead by J.W.J. Burgers. Huygens ING, HIstorici.nl, no publication year found.
"This is an electronic edition of the registers that were kept by the clerks of the Counts of Holland, Zeeland and West-Friesland during the period 1316-1345.
These records register some 3,400 documents and other texts relating to the Counts’ administration, all of which will be published here.
The registers pertaining to Zuidholland, Kennemerland, Amstelland-Waterland and Friesland are the only ones published to date, but the other regions will follow in the foreseeable future.
[There is a chronological list of all the published texts and a search window to access single texts. A] 'Registers' button gives
access to a list of the record volumes that have been published so far.
Within each volume, one can choose between a codicological description and the option of virtually leafing through the volume in question.
From an image you subsequently have the option of clicking on to the text or texts found on the page in question." [from resource]

Directed by Marilyn Deegan, London, Centre for Computing in the Humanities /
King's College London, 2010-.
"Schenker Documents Online is a digital
edition of three large collections of documents — the voluminous correspondence
between Heinrich Schenker and the members of his circle, together with the
theorist’s diaries and lessonbooks ; these are supported by additional documents
relating to his life, and a set of "profiles" of people, places, and organizations
with which he came into contact, the newspapers and journals that he read, and his
own works. SDO does not provide facsimiles; it is thus in no sense a
digitization project, nor is it an archive in the strict sense. Rather, it is a
scholarly edition, which aims to present near-diplomatic transcriptions of original
texts, together with English translations, summaries, supporting commentary, and
such interpretation as is necessary to relate these documents to Schenker’s personal
development and those of his correspondents. Because it is digital, it provides
direct hyperlinks between documents, facilitating rapid movement from document to
document; and it offers the end-user a range of tools with which to search and
browse documents, thus facilitating the task of understanding and
contextualization." [from resource]

Edited by Andreas Gestrich and Dorothea McEwan in collaboration with Stefan Hanß. London: German Historical Institute 2015
As of 2019 the edition of British Library Add Ms 28505 is largely disfunctional as regards, for example, transcriptions, translations, indices and search functionality. Official address: http://www.ghil.ac.uk/Schimper

Ed. by the Digital Library Services, St. Louis (MO), Washington University, 2007.
"This collection is an
expanded and updated version of the original Dred Scott Case Collection. The
collection, was expanded from eighty-five to one hundred and eleven documents, over
400 pages of text. In addition, the collection is now a full-text, searchable
resource that represents the full case history of the Dred Scott Case." [from
resource]

Initially conceived by Marjorie Barkin Searl and Lu Harper. Rochester: University of Rochester, Digital Scholarship Lab, [no publication year mentioned. Probably 2018]
"The Sibley Watson Digital Archive project hopes to unite long-separated collections of family papers that shine a spotlight on Rochester from 1833 through the 1970s and illuminate the life of Emily Sibley Watson and her extended family. " [from resource]

Ed. by Catherine Coker, Elizabeth Feil, Michael Maggioncalda, Jennifer Muter, Gulnar Nagashybayeva, and Lucile Smith under the supervision of Susan Schreibman.
College Park (MD): University of Maryland, University Libraries, 2004.
"The letters on this site are transcriptions of original material located in the Archives and Manuscripts Department at the University of Maryland,
College Park, Maryland. This collection is 62 letters in extent, primarily written by a Civil War Union officer's wife, Tillie Farquhar Sterling,
with additional letters written by Tillie's husband, Will Sterling, and Tillie's mother, Anna Virginia ("A. V.") Farquhar.
The papers represent the correspondence of Tillie with her mother, her mother with Tillie, Will with his father, and of Tillie and Will with each other.
They detail daily life in wartime Maryland and offer interesting information from the perspective of two ordinary families during an extraordinary
period of our nation's history." [from resource]

Ed. by Julia Merritt, Sheffield, HRIOnline, 2007. ISBN 978-0954260899.
"John Stow's Elizabethan
classic, A Survey of London, was first published in 1598. However, London was
dramatically transformed following the Great Fire of 1666 and so an updated,
expanded version was published by John Strype. This online edition presents the
text, street plans and illustrations of Strype's classic work." [from resource]

Directed by David Whitehead (Senior Editor) and Raphael Finkel (Technical Director), Stoa Consortium 2000-2014.
"The Suda (or Stronghold) [is] a massive 10th century Byzantine Greek historical encyclopedia of the ancient Mediterranean world,
covering the whole of Greek and Roman antiquity and also including Biblical and Christian material.
Preserved in several medieval manuscripts, it has been edited and published several times since the end of the 14th century in traditional
hard-copy scholarly editions [...]. The Suda On Line (SOL) project, begun in 1998 as part of the Stoa Consortium, opens up this stronghold
of information by means of a freely accessible, keyword-searchable database, with English translations, notes, bibliography, and links to other
electronic resources. With contributions (as Translators and/or Editors) from more than two hundred people worldwide, the SOL reached the
landmark of all entries being translated and “vetted” (edited) to a usable standard on July 21, 2014." [from resource]

Directed by Alan Bowman, Charles Crowther and John Pearce, Oxford, Oxford University, 2001-2003.
Digitale Ausgabe der Vindolanda-Fragmente: römische
Wachstafeln (und Holztafeln) des 1./2. Jahrhunderts aus einer archäologischen
Grabung am Hadrianswall."The website includes texts, translations, notes and
new high-resolution 'zoomable' digital images of all the published tablets. A
virtual exhibition draws on the texts and archaeological evidence from Vindolanda
and other sites on Britain's northern frontier to introduce the content and context
of the tablets to a non-specialist audience. Other resources within the website
include a reference guide to specialised aspects of Roman life encountered in these
documents, such as currency and military terminology, the scholarly introductions to
the tablets and an account of the creation of digital texts and images." [from
resource]

Ed. by Theodore J. Crackel, Charlottesville (VA), University of Virginia Press,
2007.
"The Papers of George Washington encompasses five separate series
and the complete diaries. This digital edition offers the complete Papers to date in
one online publication. You may search on full text and by date, author, or
recipient across all volumes and series. The exceptional indexing of the individual
print volumes is combined here into a single master index, and all internal document
cross-references are linked." [from resource, http://rotunda.upress.virginia.edu:8080/pgwde/dflt.xqy?mode=menu, 2008] As of 4/2018 these documents seem to be
incorporated into the "Founders Early Access" collection.
The edition project has now in addition its own comprehensive website, still hosted at University of Virginia, 2018. [2018]

ed. by Amy E. Hughes and Naomi J. Stubbs. Ann Arbor (MI): University of Michigan Library 2018.
"Hardworking actor, playwright, and stage manager Harry Watkins (1825–94) was a prolific diarist. For fifteen years (1845–60), Watkins regularly recorded the plays he saw, the roles he performed, the books he read, and his impressions of current events. [...]
This searchable digital edition includes the entire uncorrected text of Watkins’s diary, encoded in XML, prepared in accordance with [the TEI] guidelines [...]. It is archived by the University of Michigan Library as a companion to the University of Michigan Press volume:
A Player and a Gentleman: The Diary of Harry Watkins, Nineteenth-Century US American Actor, eds. Amy E. Hughes and Naomi J. Stubbs (University of Michigan Press, 2018), https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.9290953." [from resource]